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Department of English


Course Descriptions for Previous Semesters
: Fall 2004


ENG 101, 001: College Composition

Instructors: Staff

Anticipated Size: 20 students per section, approximately 36 sections per semester.

Prerequisites: Entering students place themselves into either ENG 001 or ENG 101. Guidelines to be used as the basis for this decision are mailed to incoming students several months before the start of the semester. Students with extremely strong backgrounds in writing may attempt credit by examination through Jerry Ellis in the Onward Office.

Course Description:

ENG 101: An introductory course in college writing in which students practice the ways in which writing and reading serve to expand, clarify, and order experience and knowledge. Particular attention is given to analytic and persuasive writing. To complete the course successfully, students must write all assignments and must have portfolios of their best work approved by a committee of readers other than their classroom teachers. Especially well-prepared students will be encouraged to submit portfolios before the end of the semester; if their work is of exceptionally high quality, they will be granted early completion.

ENG 001 is a course for students who need to develop and practice the basic writing habits necessary for successful university-level writing. Successful completion of this course should enable students to do well in ENG 101. The course grants three semester credit hours, hours that do not count toward graduation but do count toward semester load.


ENG 129 (01) : Topics in ENG: Literature of the Sea

Instructor: Kail

Prerequisite: First-Year students only

Course Description: This seminar is about human identity as it is shaped through our contact with the sea. This course will introduce students to at least a few of the major writers who have taken the sea as their setting and, indeed, their primary character. Be prepared for bold voyaging on the tumultuous and sometimes dangerous seas of the human imagination!

Probable Required Text: Tania Aebi, Maiden Voyage

Joseph Conrad, The Secret Sharer and Other Stories

Eugene O'Neill, The Long Voyage Home and Other Plays

Stephen Crane, The Open Boat

Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea

Samuel Coleridge, Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Handouts of poetry and other readings.

Additional Readings: To be determined.

Evaluation: Reading journal, essays, midterm and final exams, class participation.


ENG 129 (02): Topics in Eng: Theories of Human Nature

Instructor: Callaway

Prerequisite: First-year students only

Course Description: This course will serve as a basic introduction to some of the major theories of universal human identity and to the ways in which literature can be used to enhance and to question our understanding of such theories. The course will use accessible texts and films selected for their entertainment value, as well as for what they can add to our understanding of the ideas of Plato, Christianity, Sigmund Freud, Conrad Lorenz, Jean Paul Sartre, B.F. Skinner, and Karl Marx.

Required Texts: Probable texts might include the following:

Leslie Stevenson. Ten Theories of Human Nature

Flannery O'Connor. Everything that Rises Must Converge

Jack London. The Sea Wolf

Aldous Huxley. Brave New World

Albert Camus. The Stranger

John Steinbeck. In Dubious Battle

Various short stories, poems, and films provided by the instructor.

Evaluation: Students will keep summary notebooks of their readings, take regular reading quizzes, and write 3-4 interpretive essays.


ENG 129 (03): First-year Student Seminar: American Regional Writers

Instructor: Brogunier

Prerequisite: First-year students only

Course Description: An intensive study of literary works--of fiction and poetry--by selected 20th-century American regional writers. Regional literature thrives in its portrait of a particular region and its people, with representations of their habits, manners, language, history, folklore, and values. The focus is usually on the community or the collective life of the region, though individual characters and the weaving of their lives is also important. Through class discussions and informal lectures, the class will study the above subjects; the narrative voices, literary forms, and expressive structures the authors wield to convey them; and approaches to writing literary essays.

Probable Required Texts: Robert Frost, A Boy's Will and North of Boston

Cormac McCarthy, The Orchard Keeper

Katherine Anne Porter, The Old Order: Stories of the South

William Faulkner, Go Down, Moses

Others to be selected

Evaluation: Class participation and critical essays on the literature.


ENG 129: (501): Visions of Peace and War

Instructor: Nees-Hatlen

Prerequisite: First-year students only

Course Description: How do we start, fight, survive, celebrate or criticize wars? What is a state of peace, and how can we best attain it? How can literature help us figure out our individual and collective answers to these questions? In this course, students will address these questions. They will be asked to use their life experience and their experience as readers to consider and reflect on a variety of stories, novels, and a few poems that focus on war or peace or some combination of the two.

Class activities include an interactive electronic reading journal, peer responses, student-led discussions, and several revised papers, including at least one creative response to one of the readings (such as a screen-play treatment of a key scene).

Required Texts: (depending on availability)

Mary Lee Settle. O Beulah Land

Patrick O’Brian. Master and Commander

Stephen Crane. The Red Badge of Courage

Toni Morrison. Beloved

E.M. Forster. Howards End

Sebastian Faulks. Birdsong

Joseph Heller. Catch 22

David Guterson. Snow Falling on Cedars

Evaluation: Electronic reading journal, Commentary on peer journals


ENG 131 (01): The Nature of Story

Instructor: Wilson

Prerequisite: None

Course Description: Explores the fundamental activity of why and how we create, tell and read/listen to stories. An exploration of the various ways storytelling enters our lives: through music, art, literature, photography, history, film and song. We’ll use a technology appropriate to navigate through the many ways these arts weave their stories, from swing to blues, from country to classical, from film to novels, from painting to architecture. Using an anthology of world literature as a platform, we shall attempt to illuminate the centrality of storytelling to our culture. In addition to the reading, then, we’ll view films and other visual material and listen to stories in a variety of spoken and musical forms--discussing it all as we enjoy the art of storytelling.

Required Texts: An anthology of world literature; other material will be provided by the instructor.

Evaluation: Three short quizzes spaced throughout the semester and one final quiz, all taken electronically through Webct.


ENG 131 (02): The Nature of Story

Instructor: Whelan

Prerequisite: None

Course Description: Explores the fundamental activity of why and how we create, tell and read/listen to stories. Readings may include selections from short stories, novel, film, song, and poetry. Readings will come primarily from the modern world, from the western cultural tradition and from a variety of other cultures. (Satisfies the General Education Human Values and Social Context Western Cultural Tradition and Cultural Diversity and International Perspectives Requirements.)

Required Texts: To be announced

Evaluation: Nine quizzes (lowest three grades dropped), two short response papers (two pages), one prelim and a final.


ENG 131 (03): The Nature of Story

Instructor: Staff

Prerequisite: None

Course Description: Explores the fundamental activity of why and how we create, tell and read/listen to stories. Readings may include selections from short stories, novel, film, song, and poetry. Readings will come primarily from the modern world, from the western cultural tradition and from a variety of other cultures. (Satisfies the General Education Human Values and Social Context Western Cultural Tradition and Cultural Diversity and International Perspectives Requirements.)

Required Texts: To be announced

Evaluation: To be announced.


ENG 170 (3 Sections): Foundations of Literary Analysis

(See University Course Schedule for CED offerings)

Instructors: Staff

Prerequisite: ENG 101

Course Description: This course is designed as a close reading of literary texts for students preparing to become English majors. We will explore how conventions of genre, form and style work in literature and develop a vocabulary for understanding and communicating ideas about literature. We will write regularly throughout the semester to practice the critical discourse expected of English majors.

Required Texts: To be selected.

Evaluation: Frequent papers; there will be some quizzes as well.


ENG 205 (5 Sections): Introduction to Creative Writing

Instructors: Staff

Prerequisite: ENG 101 and by permission only

Course Description: An introduction to the writing of poetry and fiction. Students will be expected to complete a body of work during the semester. Student writing will be workshopped in class.

Required Texts: To be announced

Evaluation: An end of term portfolio of work will receive a letter grade.


ENG 212 (5 Sections): Persuasive & Analytical Writing

(See University Course Schedule for CED Offerings)

Instructors: Staff

Anticipated Size: 20 per section

Prerequisite: ENG 101 and at least sophomore standing

Course Description: An introduction to the writing of poetry and fiction. Students will be expected to complete a body of work during the semester. Student writing will be workshopped in class.

Required Texts: To be announced.

Evaluation: An end of term portfolio of work will receive a letter grade.


ENG 222 (01): Reading Poems

Instructor: Brinkley

Prerequisite: ENG 101 or equivalent

Course Description: Required of all English majors, this is an introduction to the art of poetry for readers. The course focuses on helping students develop critical skills particularly suited to the interpretation and analysis of poetry. We will examine the function of poetic conventions--including figures of speech, meter, rhythm, and rhyme--in a variety of different poetic forms--both traditional and innovative--from many eras. We will also discuss the rhetorical stances that poets assume and the responses that poets seek to evoke in their readers. The goal of the course is to instill a lifelong love of poetry in its students.

Required Texts: To be decided

Evaluation: To be decided


ENG 235: Literature and the Modern World

Instructor: Cowan

Prerequisite: 3 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: A world in crisis: This course will study the modern period as an era of political, religious, sexual, social, and artistic crisis. We will examine works of art as responses to the upheavals brought about by two world wars, rapid industrial and technological growth, the decline of the British Empire, new social structures, and redesigned sexual roles. While the greater share of the course work will be devoted to modern literature, we will also spend at least five sessions examining the visual arts and film.

Tentative Text: H.D. Wells, The Time Machine

Oscar Wilde, "The Decay of Lying"

Bernard Shaw, Mrs. Warren's Profession

Wilfred Owen, Poetry

Symbolist Poets: Poetry

Rebecca West, Return of a Soldier

Willa Cather, A Lost Lady

Sam Shepard, Seven Plays

Aldo Leopold, Sand County Almanac

Additional Readings: Xeroxed articles.

Evaluation: Your grade will be based on attendance, participation, weekly quizzes, one class presentation, one paper, prelim, final.


ENG 237 (01): Coming of Age in America

Instructor: Bishop

Prerequisite: 3 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: The course explores stories of coming of age in American fiction, nonfiction, and film since World War II. As we engage the struggles of several protagonists to discover themselves and come to terms with their given circumstances, we will examine also the increasing tensions between America's prevailing myths and the ground level realities of its children.

Texts (tentative list): Bastard Out of Carolina, Dorothy Allison

In Country, Bobbie Ann Mason

October Sky, Homer Hickam

The Color of Water, James McBride

The Lone Ranger & Tonto Fist Fight in Heaven, Sherman Alexie

Additional Reading: Selected films on video

Evaluation: Response papers and class participation, exams, term project.


ENG 241 (01): American Literature Survey

Instructor: Friedlander

Course Description:

In this course we will look closely at ten to twelve major works of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction prose from the colonial period through the Civil War, paying particular attention to the textures of experience (sensual, psychological, social, and historical) that these works attend to and preserve. Our survey will include some of the most beautiful, powerful and influential works in American literature.

Probable Texts:

To be decided

Evaluation:

Weekly quizzes, mid-term paper, final exam


ENG 244 (01): Writers of Maine

Instructor: Irvine

Prerequisite: ENG 101 or equivalent

Course Description: I've heard living in Maine compared to living in a corner, or living on the edge, or living on an island. If any of these descriptions is valid, our geography must have affected our writers and our literature. Accordingly, in this course we'll read essays, novels, short stories and poetry in which the setting figures predominantly; we'll try to determine in what ways that setting has left its mark. Students will also, I hope, gain a greater appreciation of our state's rich literary heritage. Finally, we'll take a look at the recent controversy in Maine fiction: what is the REAL Maine, and who's writing about it?

Required Text: Maine Speaks

One Man's Meat

Country of the Pointed Firs

The Wooden Nickel

Survival of the Bark Canoe

Evaluation: Two prelims, two short essays, one research project.


ENG 253 (01): Shakespeare: Selected Plays

Instructor: Brucher

Prerequisite: 3 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: This course introduces Shakespeare's drama through close analysis of ten or so plays. We'll distinguish the conventions of comedies, tragedies, histories, and romances; determine the nature of major literary themes (including revenge, honor, justice, and love); and see the texts as both performance and cultural documents. We'll use videos of plays to demonstrate staging and interpretation possibilities, but we'll spend considerable time reading Shakespeare's language.

Probable Text: The Norton Shakespeare, 1st Ed., S. Greenblatt (Norton, 1997)

Evaluation: weekly commentaries, several short papers and/or exams, and a final exam. Performance may be substituted for some written work.

ENG 256 (01): British Women's Literature

Instructor: Rogers

Prerequisite: This is an introduction to literature by women of Britain and former British colonies. We'll examine poetry and fiction not only for their intrinsic pleasures and insights, but also for a sense of how literary conventions and gender ideology have interacted with women's experiences to shape and inform their writing.

Required Texts: To be announced

Evaluation: To be announced


ENG 271 (01): The Act of Interpretation

Instructor: Billitteri

Prerequisite: ENG 170

Course Description: A writing-intensive introduction to literary analysis through the systematic study of three schools of literary theory set in critical dialogue with each other: structuralism, semiotics, and gender studies. This course approaches the act of interpretation as a rule bound, historical specific activity and aims at developing the students' awareness of the methodological and interpretative consequences carried by each different theoretical position. To this end, theoretical texts are flanked by literary texts to allow for practical application of key concepts.

Texts: TBA

Evaluation: Class attendance, weekly responses, mid-term and final paper.


ENG 280 (01): Introduction to Film

Instructor: J. Evans

Prerequisite: 3 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: The course will examine the medium of film from its inception at the end of the l9th century to the present. Emphasis is placed on a beginning understanding of film techniques and analysis. The course will concentrate on how films make their meanings.

Required Texts: Louis Giannetti, Understanding Film, 9th ed. (Prentice Hall)

The narrative films themselves are the primary texts.

Evaluation: Exams, exercises, out-of-class final, participation.


ENG 307 (01): Writing Fiction

Instructor: Everman

Prerequisite: ENG 205 or 206 or permission

Course Description: This is a serious workshop in fiction that focuses on technique. Students are expected to have a good background in writing and to be able to complete a substantial body of fiction (30-50 pages) during the semester. Revision will be stressed.

Required Texts: None

Evaluation: Quality of work, demonstrated progress, attendance and participation.


ENG 309 (01): Writing Creative Non-Fiction

Instructor: Irvine

Prerequisite: ENG 205, 206, 212 or permission

Course Description: Sometimes called “The Fourth Genre,” creative non-fiction uses the strategies of fiction (plot, dialog, characters, etc.) in writing about factual subjects: autobiography, biography, travel, science/nature, cultural issues, current events. We’ll read creative non-fiction and also write it.

Required Texts: To be selected.

Evaluation: 5 essays and class participation.


ENG 3l7: Business and Technical Writing

Instructors: Staff

Anticipated Size: 20 per section (15 sections)

Prerequisite(s): ENG 101 or equivalent; juniors and seniors in declared majors only.

Course Description: This course helps prepare students to communicate effectively in the workplace. Students become familiar with the processes, forms, and styles of writing in professional environments as they work on memoranda, business correspondence, instructions, proposals, reports and similar materials. Special attention is paid to the fundamental skills of problem-solving and analyzing and responding to purpose and audience. Some sections may be taught in a computer-equipped classroom and some may incorporate electronic communication, such as FirstClass.

Required Texts: To be selected by each instructor.

Evaluation: Several short written assignments and one major report.


ENG 3l7 (01): Business and Technical Writing (on-line)

Instructor: Callaway

Prerequisite(s): Junior standing

Course Description: This is the same Business & Technical Writing curriculum as described above, but all assignments and most of the course instruction will be accessed via the University's Webct instructional Internet server and the FirstClass course conference system. We will meet as a class six to eight times during the semester to discuss progress and to provide orientation for group writing projects. Assignments will be submitted, marked, and returned to students via FirstClass.

Required Texts:

Anderson, Paul, Technical Communication: A Reader Centered Approach, 4th edition, Harcourt Brace

Hacker, Diana, A Writer's Reference, 4th edition, St. Martins/Bedford

Additional Readings: All Webct instructional pages and links to outside Internet sources.

* The course requires extensive access to a personal computer and the Internet.


ENG 395 (01): English Internship (Peer Tutoring)

Instructor: Kail

Prerequisite: Recommendation from faculty

Course Description: Students in English internship will learn how to become effective peer writing tutors. Students will first experience collaborative work among themselves involving essay writing, critical reading of peers' essays, log-writing, and discussion. The second phase of the course will involve supervised peer tutoring in the English Department's Writing Center.

Required Texts: Ken Bruffee, A Short Course in Writing

Additional Readings: Selected essays on composition theory and practice.

Evaluation: In addition to the papers and critiques students will write as part of their training, tutors will also be expected to keep a journal of their tutoring experiences and will write a paper based on this journal at the end of the semester


ENG 405 (01): Directed Writing (Creative)

Instructor: Hunting

Prerequisite: ENG 205, 307 or 308 and permission

Course Description: This is an upper-level creative writing course primarily for senior English majors with an emphasis in creative writing. In this course, I meet one-on-one with each student once a week to go over the work. Generally, a student in ENG 405 is working on his or her final manuscript which is a requirement for creative writing students.

Required Texts: None

Evaluation: The grade for this course is determined by the quality of the work the student produces during the semester and the dedication of the student.


ENG 406 (01): Advanced Creative Writing

Staff: Everman

Prerequisite: ENG 307 or 308 and permission

Course Description: A workshop in fiction and poetry at the advanced level.

Required Texts: None

Evaluation: Letter grade based on quality of work and commitment.


INT 410 (01): Introduction to the Study of Linguistics

Instructor: Bauschatz

Prerequisite(s): None

Course Description: An introduction to many aspects of language including speech sound (production and perception), gestural systems, language acquisition, linguistic history, grammar (especially generative-transformational grammar), and meaning. The course, designed for students with no previous training in linguistics, aims at breadth of coverage with depth in some areas.

Required Text: Parker, Frank, and Kathryn Riley. 2000. Linguistics for Non-Linguists

Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.

Evaluation: Class participation, presentation of assigned exercises and responses to assigned readings, and a final examination.


ENG 418 (01): Topics in Professional Writing

Writing Business & Technical Procedures

Instructor: Adams

Prerequisite: ENG 317 and permission

Course Description:

Clear, effective procedures and instructions represent critical documents within such areas as health & safety, crisis management, regulatory compliance and quality assurance. This course focuses on the knowledge and application of principles for developing procedures and instructions that work. Topics include document planning & design, situation analysis, clear technical style, color and graphics, etc. Students will complete both individual and collaborative assignments, as well as a semester project for a real audience.

Evaluation:

-Individual and collaborative writing assignments

-Oral presentations

-Quizzes

-Semester project


ENG 440 (01): Major American Writers:

Gertrude Stein, William Carlos Williams, & Louis Zukofsky

Instructor: S. Evans

Prerequisite: 6 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: This course will investigate the works and lives of three major American modernist writers within the context of the social, political, artistic, and intellectual movements of their day. Topics to be explored include: modernism and the avant-garde; erotic economies and the writing of desire; the politics of poetic representation; and the shaping of "American" identity in the first half of the twentieth century.

Required Texts:

Gertrude Stein, Selected Writings of Gertrude Stein
Gertrude Stein, Lectures in America
William Carlos Wiliams, Collected Poems
William Carlos Williams, Paterson
William Carlos Williams, Selected Essays
Louis Zukofsky, "A"
Louis Zukofsky, Complete Short Poetry
Louis Zukofsky, Prepositions
Others TBA

Evaluation: Frequent brief responses, one 5-7 page paper, one final project of 10-12 pages.


ENG 445 (01): The American Novel

Instructor: Everman

Prerequisite: 6 hours of literature

Course Description: The class will examine closely themes, attitudes, and techniques that contribute to the development of the American novel. Particular attention will be paid to narrative techniques.

Required Texts: To be announced

Evaluation: To be announced


ENG 451 (01): Chaucer & Medieval Literature

Instructor: Mooney

Prerequisite(s): 6 Hours of literature and permission

Course Description: Readings from Chaucer and his English contemporaries. Focus on understanding the nature of the Medieval world and its expression in the literature of the time, and on developing reading skill in Middle English.

Required Texts: To be announced.

Evaluation: To be announced.


ENG 454 (01): Elizabeth and Seventeenth Century

Lyric and Narrative Poetry

Instructor: Hatlen

Prerequisite(s): 6 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: This course will focus on two major poets of the English Renaissance, Edmund Spenser and John Milton, with briefer attention to lyric poems by such poets as Wyatt, Sidney, Shakespeare, Donne, Jonson, and Herbert. The focus on Spenser and Milton will allow us to devote most of our attention to the two great narrative poems of the English Renaissance, Spenser's The Faerie Queene and Milton's Paradise Lost. As context for these long poems, we will also read shorter poems by both writers and some prose by Milton, as well as a sampling of representative poems by other Renaissance poets. We will also consider the social, religious, and intellectual contexts that shaped the poetry of this period.

Text:

Edmund Spenser's Poetry, 3rd edition. Ed. Hugh MacLean and Anne Lake Prescott (Norton)

The Portable Milton, Ed. Douglas Bush (Penguin)

The Penguin Book of English Renaissance Verse 1509-1659. Ed. David Norbrook

and H. R. Woudhuysen (Penguin)

Evaluation:

1. Weekly informal, one-page response papers

2. Two four-page critical essays

3. A ten- to fifteen-page research paper


ENG 457 (01): Victorian Literature & Culture

Instructor: Wilson

Prerequisite: 6 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: Readings from the major 19th-century British poets, such as Tennyson, Browning and Arnold, and major essayists, such as Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold, and Pater. Focus on the major literary and intellectual issues from Romanticism to the 20th century. We'll spend considerable time with the poetry and painting of a group of Victorian rebels, the Pre-Raphaelites. Using multimedia technology, we shall also explore the relationship between the visual arts, such as photography and painting, and the literature, ideas, and cultural conflicts of the period.

Probable Texts: Victorian Prose and Poetry

Tennyson, Idylls of the King

Carlyle, Past and Present

Fowles, The French Lieutenant's Woman

An Anthology of Pre-Raphaelite Writings

Evaluation: To be determined


ENG 459: Contemporary British Literature

Instructor: Cowan

Prerequisite(s): 6 hours of literature or permission

Course Description: The course begins with a review of modernism and its place in the English tradition. It will continue with a consideration of postmodernism and the various trends in English literature since the 1930's. Readings will include fiction, drama, poetry, and essays. The course involves reading and writing about literature.

Required Texts: To be selected.

Evaluation: Your grade will be based on attendance, participation, weekly quizzes, one or two short papers, two medium length papers, class presentations, midterm, and a final.


ENG 472 (01): Teaching English in the Secondary School

Instructor:

Course Description: Theory, issues and methods in teaching English language and writing (including writing about literature).

Required Texts: To be determined

Evaluation: To be determined


ENG 496 (01): Field Experience in Professional Writing

Instructor: Staff

Prerequisite(s): Nine hours of writing including ENG 317 and permission. In special instances, some requirements may be waived.

Course Description: ENG 496 is an experiential learning course in which students receive academic credits for doing workplace communication tasks. A student chooses his/her placement in consultation with the instructor and with the approval of the sponsor. Most students enroll for 3 credits. However, students should note that ENG 496 can be repeated for up to 6 credits, and variable amounts of credit can be arranged.

To earn 3 credits, students are required to spend 12 hours per week at their sponsored placements. In addition, they write a weekly journal, assemble materials for a portfolio/writing sample, attend technology workshops and seminars, meet with the coordinator when required, and write a final report.

Required Texts: None.


ENG 499: Capstone Experience in English

Prerequisite: None

Course Description: Student teaching has been designated as Capstone. Three courses, ENG 405, 406, and 395, have been designated as Capstone courses if certain conditions are met. For ENG 405 and 406, students must submit and have approved "a finished manuscript (e.g., a novella or a collection of poems or stories)." For ENG 395, students must also tutor in The Writing Center for one semester. Because these three courses can be taken as either a Capstone experience or a regular course, a bookkeeping issue has arisen. To resolve this issue, a zero credit, pass/fail course, ENG 499, has been created to make the distinction between those using one of these three courses as a Capstone and those simply taking it a regular course. Accordingly, students should enroll in ENG 499 for the semester in which they plan to tutor in The Writing Center or complete the required manuscript.

Required Texts: None

Evaluation: None


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Department of English
5725 Neville Hall
Orono, ME 04469-5725

Phone: (207) 581-3822


The University of Maine
, Orono, Maine 04469
207-581-1110
A Member of the University of Maine System